Stradawhovious wrote:hammAR wrote:IF that was directed to me,
Not directed at you Gunny, If it was, I would have properly addressed you. You have your reasons for owning what you do, and I have mine.
I just think that DPMS has their place in the firearms community and are priced accordingly. To blindly ridicule them as crap is silly. If you (also not directed at you Gunny....) want to give criticisms towards brand A or model X, give reasons, not just "'cause I said so". Blindly poo-pooing anything is counterproductive.
Unless its a Glock or a Hi-point. Their craptastic reputation needs no support.
One of the first things I said in this thread was just that. As a range toy for a few hundred rounds a year, DPMS would be fine. I absolutely agree, they have a place in the firearms community. As does Star, Glock, Hi-Point. Yes. I put DPMS in that category based on their reputation and personally-observed FTF, FTE, BCG failure, out-of-spec chambers, out-of-spec mag wells. At least a few the nationally recognized trainers won't allow someone to take their courses with a DPMS rifle. The ones I know about for sure are Larry Vickers and Jeff Gonzales because it's unusual that that rifle will go 1500 rounds without a failure that diverts class time and effort. I know what Greg Sullivan thinks about DPMS, but I don't know if he excludes them from his carbine courses. Rumor has it Magpul Dynamics does. I don't know of any police or government agencies that use DPMS rifles.
Defend them all you want, buy their rifles if you want. This thread OP sought opinions on DPMS rifles. That's mine, based on reputation in the "community", personal observation, and anecdotes that I hear over and over and over. You may not agree. I have no problem with that. The quality and reliability of the weapons YOU buy don't affect me in the slightest.